Statistical Space: A Random Walk Through a World Made of Uncertainty
I want to tell you a story about a strange way of looking at the world—one that starts not with particles or fields or spacetime, but with uncertainty itself . Not the kind of uncertainty you get because your measuring device is lousy or because you didn’t study for the exam. I mean something deeper: the idea that the world is fundamentally fuzzy, that reality itself is a kind of cloud of possibilities. This may sound like quantum mechanics, and in a way it is, but I want to go even more basic than that. I want to imagine a universe where uncertainty is the raw material out of which everything else—observables, geometry, even spacetime—emerges. The paper you’re reading tries to build such a universe. My job here is to walk you through it like a friendly guide, without the buzzwords, without the heavy math, and with the same spirit Feynman used when he explained why magnets push and pull. So let’s begin with the simplest question: What if uncertainty is the only thing that’s real? 1....